Exam Two Flashcards

1
Q

House and senate differences

A

Senate: 100 people
House: 435

In the senate, every state gets two representatives

But the house is measured by population per state

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2
Q

Oversight

A

Congresses ability to oversee, investigate and exert power over agencies

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3
Q

House rules committee

A

An institution unique to the House of Representatives that review all bills coming from a house committee before they go to the full house

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4
Q

Filibuster

A

A strategy unique to the senate whereby opponents of a piece of legislation try to talk it to death, based on the tradition of unlimited debate

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5
Q

Cloture

A

A method of closing a debate and causing an immediate vote to be taken on the question

60 votes out of 100 to stop the filibuster

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6
Q

Veto

A

Constitutional power of the president to sent a bill back to congress with reasons for rejecting it. A two-thirds vote in each house can override it

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7
Q

Gerrymandering

A

Drawing a district with boundaries that favor one or more groups of voters or some candidates over another

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8
Q

Leadership positions in the house and senate

A

Speaker of the house- the presiding officer of the House of Representatives. The speaker is elected at the beginning of each congressional session on a party-line vote. As head of the majority party, the speaker has substantial control over the legislative agenda of the house

Majority leader- the formal leader of the party controlling a majority of the seats in the house of the senate. In the senate the majority leader is the head of the majority party. In the house the majority leader ranks second in the party hierarchy behind the speaker

Minority leader- serve as chief house spokesman for their parties and to manage and schedule the legislative and executive business of the house

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9
Q

Standing committees

A

4 permeant committees
Ways and means committees has jurisdiction over tax policy
Ethics committee is 5 on each side, republican and democratic
Sub committees

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10
Q

Select committee

A

Permeant committee but it’s not quite a standing committee
Generally, temporarily
They study a problem
9/11 was a select committee

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11
Q

Joint committee

A

Joint committee is made up of a senate and house members
Rare
Join- economic committee

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12
Q

Conference committee

A

Legislation is introduced in the house and senate at the subcommittee level
Repeal and replace
They need to merge two committees together
They are temporary

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13
Q

President as chief of state

A

President as the head of state
When he travels abroad he is known as the head of the United state
Head of government

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14
Q

President as chief executive

A

Head of the executive branch of government
Top of the pyramid on the executive branch of government
Point 3,000 appointees to run different department throughout the government
Ability to appoint the top level
Give presidential pardons

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15
Q

President of government as well

A

Chief of government- head

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16
Q

Chief of party

A

Raise money for candidates

Helps to promote the goals of the party and get other officials from the party elected to office

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17
Q

Commander in chief

A

Commander of the army, navy, Air Force, coast guard, and Marine corps
Under control of an elected official
Congress has the power to declare war
Can move troops around the world
Only the president can launch a nuclear attack

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18
Q

War powers act

A

The ability to give power back to the congress notify congress within 48 hours of any use of the military congress can withdrawal/recall any troops after 60 days

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19
Q

Executive agreements

A

Agreement between the president and leader of another country but it does not need senate approval
Money cannot be involved
Future presidents do not have to abide by it

20
Q

Executive orders

A

President directive to one or more executive agencies
Sending a letter to the executive branch of government do to something
Money cannot be involved and future president do not have to abide by it

21
Q

Executive privileges

A

They do not have to cooperate with congress, can refuse to give them information
Example- Richard Nixon

22
Q

Cabinet members

A
Overrated in importance 
President often find themselves unhappy with cabinet members
15 cabinet departments 
State war and treasury 
Homeland security 
Majority service provider 
Managing national parks
Department of internal affairs
Department of education 
The secretaries, or chief administrators, of the major departments of the federal government. Cabinet secretaries are appointed by the president and approved by the senate
23
Q

“Take care” clause

A

Requirement that presidents take care that the laws are faithfully executed. Even if they disagree with them

24
Q

Chief of staff

A

The president’s executive role as the head of federal agencies and the person responsible for the implementation of national policy

25
Q

National security council

A

Created after world war 2
Panel of experts in international affairs
Give the president neutral advice
Deals with national affairs

26
Q

Office of management and budget

A

Person who puts together the president’s budget, who has to go to the Capitol Hill and defend it

27
Q

Public vs private bureaucracies

A

Private bureaucracies administer the policies of privately owned company to maximise that company’s profits.

Public bureaucracies are government-owned, without a single set of leaders, of which the focus is to provide services to the public.

28
Q

Independent executive agencies

A

Very similar to cabinet
Can be fire by the president at any time
They are not part of the cabinet department
Example: EPA, CIA, NASA

29
Q

Independent regulatory commissions

A

The objective of these agencies is in a nonpartisan manner to make rules and regulations for certain industries and polices
Comprised of experts to help
They are very powerful
They make rules so they have legislative power
They have executive power, they enforce the rules
They have judicial powers
The president appoints these individuals but the president cannot fire them
Example: FCC, OSHA, CFDC, FDA, federal reserve board

30
Q

Pendleton act

A

Got hired as a government official based on merit not political party

31
Q

Government corporation

A
Similar to private corporation 
There is a board of directors
There is a management 
There are no stock orders
The profits remain with the government corporation 
Example: Amtrak, the postal service
32
Q

Iron triangle

A

The relationship between congress(especially sub-committees), government agencies(bureaucracy), and interest groups. This helps create policy in the United States and all 3 parts want to protect their own self interests

33
Q

Marbury vs Madison

A

1803: establishes judicial review as a check on legislative power. Marshall: If the constitution is the supreme law of the land, something must ensure laws are in accordance with it. Judgement against commission.

34
Q

Judiciary act of 1789

A

Created a system of courts below the Supreme Court
Courts that are not known as district courts
Over the years, there has been two changes- Supreme Courts has expanded to nine people
The appellate courts were made- court of appeals

35
Q

Original and appellate jurisdiction

A

Original jurisdiction- ability of a judge, court to listen to evidence and make a decision
Appellate jurisdiction- ability of a court to review a decision made by lower court and potentially overturn them if they are found unconstitutionally

36
Q

Dual court system

A

The dual court system is the division between the federal and state court system

37
Q

Stare decisis

A

A Latin phrase meaning “let the decision stand”. Most cases reaching appellate courts are settled on this principle

38
Q

Solicitor general

A

Represents the governments official position

Defends the president

39
Q

What is a divided government

A

One party controls the White House and another party controls one or both houses of congress

40
Q

State of the union address mean constitutionally

A

An annual message to congress in which the president proposes a legislative program. The message is addressed not only to congress but also to the American people and to the world

41
Q

Necessary and proper clause

A

Article I, Section 8, Clause 18 of the Constitution; one of the powers of Congress that allows them to make any laws that are necessary and proper for carrying out their other powers. Also called the “Elastic Clause”

42
Q

Federal court system

A

Constitution created the Supreme Court
Judges would be lifetime appointees
Selected by the president and confirmed by congress
Article one states one of the powers congress has is it to create a system of courts

43
Q

District courts

A

95 across the country
Each state has one
Most cases at the district court level are heard by a single judge
Straight forward application of common law or statuary law
Not political positions
Opening on a district court, the two US senators go back and forth suggesting judges to appoint and then the White House appoints
Looking at questions of fact
These 95 across the country are appointed by the president
250,000

44
Q

Appellate courts

A

30,000
Much more political
Important political positions to fill
Seeking to determine if things are constitutional or unconstitutional
Interpretation can vary
Only looking to interpret the constitutionally
Much more powerful then the district courts
Seeing if the law was correct, can overturn the district courts

45
Q

Vice President

A

The constitution gives the vi e president no executive order
Can secede the president
Constitution gives them legislative power- the power to case a tie breaker
Power has increased in more recent years dealing with congress
Has become more powerful through the years

46
Q

White House staff

A

Headed up by chief of staff
This is in the inner circle of the president’s team
The president’s most trusted advisors
500 members of the White House staff, grown
Very powerful
Where policy takes shape today